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Their Eyes Were Watching God Videos 10 videos
Free will vs. Predestination. One of the many interpretations for the title Their Eyes Were Watching God. We personally like, “Stop Staring at Me...
Their eyes might’ve been watching God, but our eyes are watching Zora Neal Hurston. Hit play to learn more about Hurston and the Harlem Renaissance.
Their Eyes Were Watching God is about Janie’s coming of age story towards the path of self-discovery, just like Luke from Star Wars. Seriously, J...
Their Eyes Were Watching God Part 3: Vernacular 4788 Views
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Description:
So ye be wantin’ to learn more about vernacular? Arrr...then keep a weather eye out...and...wait. This book wasn’t written in pirate vernacular? ...Huh. Well, we’re going to check out this video to learn what role vernacular language plays in Their Eyes Were Watching God. Care to join us?
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:06
Their Eyes Were Watching God
- 00:08
Vernacular
- 00:09
a la Shmoop
- 00:11
How does Hurston's writing make us feel Janie's world?
Full Transcript
- 00:16
One of the things that stands out in her writing
- 00:19
is that it is so
- 00:21
highly vernacularly connected with what we think of
- 00:26
Harlem in that era.
- 00:28
And authors historically have been lambasted
- 00:31
for being too vernacular in things.
- 00:33
I mean, Mark Twain, Samuel Clemens, with Huck Finn comes to mind
- 00:36
as one that received a lot of attention
- 00:39
in that domain.
- 00:40
But to talk to us about her writing
- 00:41
and how she makes us actually
- 00:43
feel the world that she's in.
- 00:46
Vernacular - first let's define that word.
- 00:47
Kind of a big word.
- 00:48
It basically means how people speak.
- 00:51
So if someone were to write down exactly what we were saying word for word
- 00:55
with the letters we drop because of our accents,
- 01:00
that would be vernacular.
- 01:01
And that's exactly what Zora Neale Hurston did.
- 01:03
So when you look at the text
- 01:05
of Their Eyes Were Watching God,
- 01:06
it is so daunting, and you're like,
- 01:08
"This almost looks like another language.
- 01:10
I don't recognize this as English.
- 01:11
How am I supposed to read it?"
- 01:12
When you read it out loud, you get it.
- 01:15
It sounds like people talking.
- 01:17
So she basically mimicked people's voices
- 01:20
by dropping letters that weren't often pronounced by those people,
- 01:23
or kind of exchanging
- 01:25
certain letters for others.
- 01:27
And she has this entire book written in vernacular.
- 01:29
This is part of the reason that she wasn't
- 01:31
very much appreciated in her time.
- 01:35
Hurston herself talks about how this vernacular is really
- 01:38
an action language, and how
- 01:40
African Americans were using
- 01:43
action words.
- 01:44
And if you really read closely, you'll see
- 01:47
that a lot of the speech
- 01:48
in Their Eyes Were Watching God is about action
- 01:51
and doing.
- 01:52
And Hurston was really trying to represent
- 01:54
the realities of life. And if you write in a way
- 01:58
that people don't actually speak,
- 02:00
you can't do that.
- 02:01
So she did it not only with her content,
- 02:03
but with her writing style, as well.
- 02:05
[ pen writing ]
- 02:06
What is vernacular?
- 02:09
Why did Hurston write in the vernacular of the time?
- 02:16
Ooh, five dollar word.
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